Business Day

German grant a boost for green hydrogen

• Addition to R5bn concession­al loans to the Treasury

- Denene Erasmus Energy Writer erasmusd@businessli­ve.co.za

Germany’s KfW Developmen­t Bank will provide about R400m in grant funding to support the developmen­t of SA’s green hydrogen economy and bolster its transition to renewable energy. President Cyril Ramaphosa, who gave the opening address at the SA Green Hydrogen Summit in Cape Town on Tuesday, said SA has the potential to produce between 6-million and 13-million tonnes of green hydrogen and derivative­s a year by 2050.

Germany’s KfW Developmen­t Bank will provide about R400m in grant funding to support the developmen­t of SA’s green hydrogen economy and bolster its transition to renewable energy.

The funds will be managed by the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC) and are in addition to the €300m (about R5bn) concession­al loan agreement that KfW recently concluded with National Treasury to support SA’s efforts to reduce its reliance on coal in the energy sector via the Just Energy Transition Partnershi­p.

The announceme­nt was made at the start of the SA Green Hydrogen Summit in Cape Town this week and coincided with a separate statement from the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) that it will provide early-stage capital for the developmen­t of SA’s hydrogen value chain. The state-owned PIC is Africa’s biggest asset manager, administer­ing the pension funds of most government workers.

SA has abundant supplies of platinum and sun and wind energy needed to establish a green hydrogen value chain and become an exporter of the green energy source. Infrastruc­ture SA, a programme in the department of public works, has already identified a pipeline of 19 green hydrogen projects valued at more than R300bn.

OFFTAKE

However, to get the projects off the ground, SA will first have to secure offtake agreements and the necessary finance.

Green hydrogen is produced by splitting water into its hydrogen and oxygen components via electrolys­is using renewable energy such as solar or wind power.

Public works minister Patricia de Lille told the summit on Tuesday that SA is competing against countries such as Chile and Australia, and several countries in the Middle East to capture a share of the global export market for green hydrogen.

The demand for hydrogen reached an estimated 87-million tonnes in 2020 and is expected to grow to between 500-million and 680-million tonnes by 2050. Of this, the export market will account for 100Mt-180Mt.

President Cyril Ramaphosa, who gave the opening address at the summit, said SA has the potential to produce between 6-million and 13-million tonnes of green hydrogen and derivative­s a year by 2050.

Green hydrogen, he said, has been identified as “one of the big four frontiers” in SA’s Just Energy Transition Investment Plan launched earlier this month at the COP27 climate summit at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt.

“According to the plan SA will need $98bn [about R1.6-trillion] over the next five years to enable a just transition and achieve our ambitious emissions reduction targets,” Ramaphosa said.

Reaching the green hydrogen production volumes mentioned by Ramaphosa would require the installati­on of between 140GW and 300GW of renewable energy — about four to seven times more than SA’s total installed generation capacity.

“The potential for green hydrogen to become a thriving sector for SA is huge. The government will work with the sector to create an enabling environmen­t for investors ... to create much needed jobs,” De Lille said.

One of the first projects expected is the Prieska Power Reserve (PPR) project in the Northern Cape. According to De Lille, PPR will start producing green hydrogen and ammonia in 2026 by combining highyieldi­ng renewable solar and wind energy.

The first phase of the project could create more than 10,500 jobs over the course of its constructi­on and operation, the public works minister said.

 ?? ?? Cyril Ramaphosa
Cyril Ramaphosa
 ?? /Reuters/Esa Alexander ?? Renewable president: President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks at the Green Hydrogen Summit at Century City in Cape Town yesterday.
/Reuters/Esa Alexander Renewable president: President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks at the Green Hydrogen Summit at Century City in Cape Town yesterday.

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